Understanding High TSH with Normal T4
As the founder of CFP Weight Loss, I've worked with thousands of adults in their late 40s and 50s who struggle with thyroid labs while following low-carb or ketogenic diets. High TSH (thyroid-stimulating hormone) paired with normal T4 (thyroxine) often signals your body is adapting to carbohydrate restriction rather than true hypothyroidism. This pattern appears in up to 25% of people on sustained very-low-carb plans according to metabolic studies.
Your pituitary gland raises TSH to stimulate the thyroid when it senses lower energy availability from reduced carbs. T4 stays normal because the thyroid is still producing hormone, but conversion to active T3 (triiodothyronine) may slow. This is called non-thyroidal illness syndrome or adaptive thermogenesis, a protective mechanism to conserve energy during perceived scarcity.
Key Triggers on Low-Carb and Keto Diets
Several factors amplify this response in middle-aged adults managing diabetes, blood pressure, and joint pain. First, cortisol elevation from carb withdrawal and chronic stress directly suppresses T4-to-T3 conversion while prompting higher TSH. Studies show cortisol can rise 30-50% in the first weeks of strict keto, especially without adequate sleep.
Second, insufficient calories or micronutrients like selenium, zinc, and iodine impair thyroid efficiency. Many beginners undereat protein and fat while fearing calories, triggering further TSH elevation. Third, insulin reduction itself modulates thyroid feedback loops. In my book The CFP Metabolic Reset, I detail how gradual carb reintroduction at 40-60 grams daily often normalizes these markers without sacrificing fat loss.
Hormonal shifts around perimenopause compound the issue, as declining estrogen reduces thyroid receptor sensitivity. If you've failed multiple diets before, this TSH pattern may explain persistent plateaus despite strict adherence.
Practical Steps to Support Thyroid Health on Keto
Don't panic or immediately medicate. Track symptoms: persistent fatigue, cold hands, or constipation warrant deeper investigation including free T3, reverse T3, and thyroid antibodies. Increase dietary fat to 70-75% of calories and aim for 1.6-2.0 grams of protein per kg of ideal body weight to signal metabolic safety.
Incorporate stress reduction: 10-minute daily walks despite joint pain can lower cortisol without gym intensity. Supplement wisely—200 mcg selenium and 150 mcg iodine daily from food-first sources like Brazil nuts and seafood. Cycle carbs strategically using the CFP 5-day low-carb/2-day moderate-carb template to prevent adaptive downregulation.
Re-test labs after 8-12 weeks of these adjustments. Most clients see TSH drop 0.5-2.0 mIU/L while continuing steady 1-2 pounds weekly fat loss. Insurance barriers shouldn't stop you; these changes cost little beyond better food choices.
Long-Term Metabolic Implications
Left unaddressed, chronic high TSH with normal T4 can slow basal metabolic rate by 5-10%, making further weight loss harder. However, the CFP approach views this as a temporary adaptation, not failure. By addressing root causes like hidden inflammation from prior yo-yo dieting and optimizing sleep, you rebuild trust in sustainable protocols tailored for busy, overwhelmed adults over 45.